Carrick Has Earned His Chance as United Weigh Permanent Appointment
- Manchester United are preparing formal talks with Michael Carrick over staying on as head coach next season.
- Carrick has won 10 of his 15 matches since replacing Ruben Amorim in January and secured Champions League qualification.
- United’s hierarchy are still considering outside candidates, but Carrick has strong backing from players and supporters alike.
Manchester United have spent the last decade chasing certainty and rarely finding it. Managers have come and gone, philosophies have shifted with the wind and every new rebuild has eventually started to resemble the previous one. Yet in the middle of another turbulent season, Michael Carrick has quietly steadied the club.
Sources have told ESPN that United are now preparing formal discussions with Carrick about remaining as head coach beyond this campaign after an impressive spell in interim charge. The former midfielder stepped in following Ruben Amorim’s dismissal in January and has overseen a run of results that not only calmed the atmosphere around Old Trafford but secured a return to the Champions League.
Ten wins from 15 matches is not a statistic to dismiss lightly, particularly given the pressure surrounding the club and the quality of opposition beaten along the way. Victories against Manchester City, Arsenal, Chelsea and Liverpool have strengthened the belief internally that Carrick deserves serious consideration.
There is an understanding within the club that another summer of upheaval carries risks of its own. Carrick is well-liked inside the dressing room and has developed a strong connection with supporters who have responded positively to the calmer feel around the team in recent months. His coaching staff, which includes Steve Holland, Jonathan Woodgate, Travis Binnion and Jonny Evans, has also earned praise behind the scenes.
United are not abandoning the idea of an external appointment. Sources say other coaches have already been contacted as part of what the hierarchy insist will be a thorough recruitment process. But Carrick has moved into pole position through results rather than reputation.
That matters at a club where too many appointments in recent years have felt driven by image or emotion rather than football logic.
Carrick has never tried to dominate the spotlight. As a player he preferred intelligence over noise, and his coaching style appears similar. United have looked more balanced, more disciplined and, perhaps most importantly, more composed during his time in charge.
There is still major work ahead. The recruitment department are prioritising two central midfielders and a left winger this summer, while reinforcements at centre-back, left-back and goalkeeper are also being explored. United know they cannot drift into another transfer window without clarity over who will lead the project.
That is why talks with Carrick are expected before the season concludes.
Old Trafford has often searched for grand solutions since Sir Alex Ferguson retired. Carrick may not be the glamorous appointment some imagined, but football clubs are rarely repaired through glamour alone. Sometimes stability is the boldest decision of all.